Please go on, explain to me what is so dinosour about stoo's comment. BTW i first certed in the late 60's when PADI was in the phase of a new born agency and what are we going to name it. The old timers did not mess things up. Its the newby's that have gone to the how to make the most $ of something simple. Its the newbys that require all methods to be instant gratification processes.
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If you are of the new generation you are handicapped because you cant conceive the past, you can only cuss it. We on the other side have not only seen the movie we were in it and most probably being laughed at cause our flippers do not match our masks.
On behalf of the younger generation, you do have so much more to manage when training is involved. cell phones candi crush texts ect. I can guarentee the old timers could assemble and tote their own gear and did not blame the dm when thier J valve was pulled. J valve ??? You can look that one up.
If this is directed to me, you are making a really bad assumption. My first scuba class was 1963, double-hose reg and no BCD.
My complaint is about stoo's complaint about ""PADI-fication of diving which requires a new course and card for every inch you move further into the sport." As has been posted on here numerous times, PADI did not invent the progressive-diving training...others did that first, because of customer demand. We old-timers took a very long class, with lots of training; today a much better version of that training (and MUCH better training materials, thanks to PADI) is still available, but now you do it a piece at a time, and stop when you've run out of either money, time, or attention span. The problem is not the piece-meal training, it is the parental attitudes that "my kid is perfect and can do no wrong and can learn anything instantly" and the kids believe it. I saw a great sign today: "If you want to be an expert at something, please understand that when you start doing it you are going to suck."